Using a DataView to Control Edits, Deletions, or Additions in Windows Forms

Problem

You need to selectively prevent users from editing, deleting, or adding data in a Windows Forms application.

Solution

Bind a DataView to Windows Forms controls.

The sample code contains four event handlers:

Form.Load

Sets up the sample by filling a DataTable with the Orders table from the Northwind sample database. A DataView is created from the table and bound to the data grid on the form.

Allow Delete Button.Click

Sets whether the DataView allows records to be deleted based on the value in a check box.

Allow Edit Button.Click

Sets whether the DataView allows records to be edited based on the value in a check box.

Allow Insert Button.Click

Sets whether the DataView allows records to be inserted based on the value in a check box.

The C# code is shown in Example 7-30.

Example 7-30. File: ControlDataEditWithDataViewForm.cs

// Namespaces, variables, and constants
using System;
using System.Configuration;
using System.Data;
using System.Data.SqlClient;

private DataView dv;

// . . . 

private void ControlDataEditWithDataViewForm_Load(object sender,
 System.EventArgs e)
{
 // Fill the Order table.
 SqlDataAdapter da = new SqlDataAdapter("SELECT * FROM Orders",
 ConfigurationSettings.AppSettings["Sql_ConnectString"]);
 DataTable dtOrders = new DataTable("Orders");
 da.FillSchema(dtOrders, SchemaType.Source);
 da.Fill(dtOrders);

 // Create a view and bind it to the grid.
 dv = new DataView(dtOrders);
 dataGrid.DataSource = dv;
}

private void allowDeleteCheckBox_CheckedChanged(object sender,
 System.EventArgs e)
{
 dv.AllowDelete = allowDeleteCheckBox.Checked;
}

private void allowEditCheckBox_CheckedChanged(object sender,
 System.EventArgs e)
{
 dv.AllowEdit = allowEditCheckBox.Checked;
}

private void allowInsertCheckBox_CheckedChanged(object sender,
 System.EventArgs e)
{
 dv.AllowNew = allowInsertCheckBox.Checked;
}

Discussion

The DataGrid control does not have properties that control the adding, editing, or deleting the data in the control. Binding a DataGrid to a DataTable binds to the default view of the underlying DataTable .

The DataView class represents a view of the DataTable that can be data bound on both Windows Forms and Web Forms. The DataView can be customized for editing, filtering, searching, and sorting.

The DataView class can be used to add, edit, or delete records in the underlying DataTable . The properties described in Table 7-14 control the data modification permitted in a DataView .

Table 7-14. DataView properties

Property

Description

AllowDelete

Gets or sets a Boolean value indicating whether deletes are allowed

AllowEdit

Gets or sets a Boolean value indicating whether edits are allowed

AllowNew

Gets or sets a Boolean value indicating whether new rows can be added

If AllowNew is true , the record is not added until the EndEdit( ) method is called either explicitly or implicitly. The CancelEdit( ) method of the DataRowView can be called to discard the row before it is added.

If AllowEdit is true , the changes to the row are not committed until the EndEdit( ) method is called either explicitly or implicitly. Only one row can be edited at a time. The CancelEdit( ) method of the DataRowView can be called to discard the row before it is added.

If the AddNew( ) or BeginEdit( ) method of the DataRowView is called, EndEdit( ) is called implicitly on the pending row; this applies the changes to the row in the underlying DataTable . In data controls that allow editing multiple records, EndEdit( ) is called implicitly when the current row is changed.

Connecting to Data

Retrieving and Managing Data

Searching and Analyzing Data

Adding and Modifying Data

Copying and Transferring Data

Maintaining Database Integrity

Binding Data to .NET User Interfaces

Working with XML

Optimizing .NET Data Access

Enumerating and Maintaining Database Objects

Appendix A. Converting from C# to VB Syntax



ADO. NET Cookbook
ADO.NET 3.5 Cookbook (Cookbooks (OReilly))
ISBN: 0596101406
EAN: 2147483647
Year: 2002
Pages: 222
Authors: Bill Hamilton

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